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Chicago examiner vol xl no 236 a m tuesday Chicago september 23 1913 tuesday reentered in u s patent office price one cent ss^tt packers are given shock by warning of pasior two hundred delegates at feast hear the rev r a white de clare that suppression of in dividualism is a misfortune chicagoans assail government for too strict inspection and urge subsidy to the farmers to increase their production two hundred delegates to the packers â€¢ onvention dimng last night at the con gress hotel received a rude shock when the rev dr rufus a white pastor of the people's liberal church thrust upon them this question what is going to happen to this coun try through the suppression of individ ualism which is apparently a necessary result of the development of big busi ness such eminent packers as a watson armour arthur meeker edward f swift lawrence h armour charles h swift nelson morris harold h swift kdward morris jr and thomas e wil son stared in amazement as the reverend after-dinner speaker dropping his vein of airy persiflage delivered this thrust while answering to the toast of the social side of business ambitious worker lost in the rush of big business said the hev dr white individualism is sub merged the ambitious worker is lost n the great rases c 2 employes there jay be a dozen men trained expe rienced capable each of them fitted to j)e the head of a business but in tlia vorlrugs of-^pur great machine-like cora jiwimfrjthere rsqjoom at the top for only sne man among wtose twelve ambitious experienced men and the other j leven must remain mere elxrka or aub erdinates individualism is being lost sight of it is a great misfortune that that is so or individualism is what has builded up ihls great country it will be a sad day for the nation if through the workings of your great com i:iatio:i and of other industrial aggrega tions you succeed in submerging the in dividual and crush out individual initia tive and individual effort in just the degree that you create a dominant and exclusive class of captains t industry each having despotic rule over thousands of routine subordinates rom whom all aspiration and ambition has been crushed out by the hopelessness if advancement in just that degree you lave weakened the citizenship of amer ica menace to citizenship if you reduce men to the level of mere mployes without hope of promotion or success in life you have killed the hope of citizenship in these men you have killed their initiative and their chance of advancement by perseverance industry and effort since the world began two forces have struggled for dominance in the af fairs of men individualism and collectiv ism individualism has accomplished some o the greatest tnings in the world but combination has now obtained the | mastery and the struggle reaches into all departments of business life this tendency to collectivism may be dunne sends troops to end mine slayings . i soldiers go to franklin county to prevent riots springfield 111 sept 22 acting upon the request of sheriff vaughn of i franklin county governor dunne to night directed adjutant general dickson to send state troods to benton franklin county where serious trouble is feared following the killing of two men coal miners are alleged to have killed the men and rumors became current to i night that an element in the town was preparing to retaliate general dickson jrdered company f benton fourth regiment on duty un 1 der command of captain o c smith duty keeps clark from chautauqua i speaker of house says he too had chance to lecture washington sept 22.-here is j speaker clark's statement as to why he declintd chautauqua engagements he ! does not want to be placed in position i of criticising bryan in fact he thinks | bryan made his real mistake by not quitting when criticised he says bryan's time was such that he could make lectures while he clark couldn't i could not accept engagements for the chautauqua lecture this summer be cause the house was in session said speaker clark it was my duty to stay here as speaker of the house of repre sentatives i felt it necessary to be pres ent to preside over the house i had been elected by the democrauu members to this office its duties have kept me busy that is the reason why j i did not go on the chautauqua plat j form this summer we are here still to ask law to keep bryan off platform britten says resolution will be introduced next season washington sept 22 if secretary of state bryan goes back to the lecture platform on the chautauqua circuit rep resentative britten of Chicago will intro duce a resolution forbidding a member of the cabinet to lecture for pay he annouced this to-day when he failed to introduce the resolution at this time it is toe late for f'nis season ":.' - secretary bryan has announced that his lecture at warrenton was the last one this year although the resolution is pri marily directed at cabinet officers it will include members of congress also i think they should be forb:dden to lecture for pay while congress is in session morgan abroad , is mum on u.s affairs financier going to london and continent for vacation plymouth eng sept 22 among the passengers arriving to-day on the liner kaiser wilhelm were j p morgan and his sister mrs w p hamilton mr morgan is going to london and the conti nent for a vacation he refused to dis cuss american business or political af fairs after two more trips the kaiser wilhelm will be withdrawn from commis s on and be altered so she can carry only first and third class passengers to the exclusion of second class gas heater kills sleeper john burke 4405 west harrison street secretary of the Chicago fire appliance company 40 north dearborn street was found dead in bed yesterday at his home by mrs helen rockerfeller 4353 west harrison street a friend of the family when she entered the nouse to cook sup per for him a gas heater was burning and the police believe that this used up the oxygen in the room and burke was suffocated save 5 lost 36 hours on boat in lake storm lifesavers rescue men for whom bride and sweetheart watch till exhausted waited for two sons father of youths who built boat encourages women de spite own fears louis ropke now sixty-eight years old bu it a boat about seven years ago the strongest kind of a boat he knew how the gasoline launch comet he saw his two sons and three other fishermen go aboard her sunday morning saw them motor out into lake michigan until they were gone from sight saw a terrific gale arise over the lake and waited sleep less thirty-six hours for his boys who should have returned in five life sav ers picked up the crew last night at michigan city half dead they had passed through one of the most terrible experiences ever survived on the lakes and so had the old man and the women who watched from louis ropke's fisher man's shanty at the foot of fifty-first street frank ropke as captain and thomas his brother with thomas wainwright charles kimball and l j reger made up the party they were lost in the lake from 10 o'clock sunday morning until nearly dark yesterday without blankets without warm clothing without food â€” ex cepting raw fish with numbed fingers they were compelled to cling to the boat which the lake seemed striving to snatch away from them two women watch meanwhile louis ropke was trying to comfort two vxomen and himself in the fisher shanty one of the women was grace quiinby a girl of nineteen years who is to marry frank ropke the other woman was the wife of thomas wainwright these women knew that the o'd man beside them was the builder of the boat and over and over again they begged mtn v v-wbtjtn'otv tr ftr-r 8 he give ast,ui-.ui,_e3 â€” but when the strain was all over be confessed that he had been tryiug harder to assure himself than them i was wondering about her fastenings and her stem post and her ribs ail the time he said i knew i had built her strong but it was so long ago i could just see every piece of timber in her makeup every seam of her and i knew what she was up against an ordinary boat v.ould have been pounded to spli.t ter lie lake just takes hold of a launch you uw and sort of grips it with one band while she smashes it with the other anyway it seems like that like the face of a prize fighter being pummeled in a clinch 1 knew the comet could stand a ot oi punishment but how much first sunday passed jen all sunday night then all jouday and grace here who's to be my daughter-in-law trying all the while to keep her nerves in band and her eyes dry and a little iaith in her heart but i'm g.ad i built that boat batteries of boat die it was a strange story that frank ropke skipper of the comet toid after the life savers at michigan city had re stored him and his companions to some think like life we had trouble from the start he said we went out just to aftend a net about fifteen miles out in the lake we expected to be back early in the after noon and so didn't take a bite of pro visions and we bad been so anxious to get an early start that we had every one of us gone out without breakfast we were just about fourteen miles out when our batteries died on us that was at 10 o'clock sunday morning we tried the emergency batteries but they were out of commission too there wasn't anything to do but keep a sharp lookout and wait at first we decided to stay at anchor in the hope of being picked up but the storm kept rising until nobody would ex pect to see any kind of boat coming from shore nobody would have been fool ish enough to leave then we decided to cut loose and drift with the wind eat fish flaw the storm sent waves over us uine and again and it seemed as if the gaie and the high sea together would pick up out little boat give it a toss and turn it upside down then the real suffering started my brother tom had cramps in his stomach and all of us were limp as wet handker chiefs from exposure and hard work and no food we had some fish but we had 10 eat them raw and they were not so bad at that we were going to draw straws to de cide which of us should jump into the lake and take chances on gett ng ashore alive to send rescuers when we saw the life savers coming richard schlmluski a city west fisher i man was the one who sent the rescuers he saw the distressed launch and ran five miles to g^ve the alarm fire at studebaker audience keeps cool first showing of the winning of barbara worth is interrupted at the beginning of the second act at the first performance of the winning of barbara worth at the studebaker theater last n'ght bunting decorating the scenery caught fire the flames were extinguished by john o'malley a prop erty man whose hand was burned se verely when he carried a portion of blaz ing bunting off the stage the audience of 1,000 persons evinced curiosity rather than fear and remained seated several of those occupying the front rows called to frazier coulter and james c edwards who occupied the stage at the time put it out put it out they said in accordance with the requirements of the city fire ordinance the steel curtain was lowered and after an interruption of less than five minutes the performance continued no one left the theater diaz expected to withdraw candidacy mexico politicans say huerta wi'l run and be elected special cable ts the examiner mexico city sept 22 a late edi tion of el notlciozo announces that felix diaz will withdraw his candidacy for the presidency the catholic party convention which met again to-day in secret session has not yet agreed upon a candidate it has been reported that general mas a nephew of huerta may get the nomina tion and also that frederico gamboa has strong backing but it is not believed that either will accept it is hinted that the nomination may go to huerta himself he has been in high favor with members of the catholic party since his appointment of eduardo tamariz leader of the party as minister of public instruction â€¢ the belief among politicians and the public generally is that huerta will run i and be elected kaiser's chum asks loan of 5,500,000 emperor's favorite brewery is in eluded in mortgage special cable ta the examiner berlin sef 22 prince max egon zu furstemberg the kaiser's most inti ' mate friend being in straits is floating a loan of 5,500,000 with most of his baden estates as security the property includes donauesthingen where the kai ser is an annual guest and the brewery which supplies the kaiser with his beer and ale the prince's embarrassment is a sequel to the prince's trust cons.st ing of furstenberg and prince christian zu nothenlobe a kinsman of the kaiser of late the trust has been short of 1 money judge speer 111 with worry over charges impeachment matter to come up soon in congress rome ga sept 22 a report from highlands n c to-day said that judge emory speer of the southern district of georgia is critically ill as a result of worry over the threatened impeachment proceedings judge speer went to highlands two weeks ago for a rest the judiciary committee of the house of representatives will take up the charges in the near future woman walking in sleep falls 2 floors son finds her dying on ground with leg broken mrs ida thompson 2720 castello ave nue was severely injured last night when she walked out of a window on the sec ond floor of her home while asleep she fell into a conrtway the crash of glass was heard by her sbn charles thompson who called some neighbors she was carried into her home and a physician was called she was later taken to the norwegian j i deaconess hospital where it was found | that her r gift leg was broken and her j spine injured composer puccini is rescued from wreck 1 comes near drowning as craft ! sinks after co lision in italy special caale to tils esjuaiaar i 1 omk sept 22 while beating to-day on lake massticiuccoii near pisa giaco ' mo puccini the composer narrowly es ' eapeu drowning a boat wh ch he was < steering collided bow-on with another in : ! which were the members of his family , botb boats were sinking when rescuers j arrived i montgomery ward of mail order firm is near death j watch dog of lake front falls in his bathroom and is seri ously injured and it is feared that he will not recover head of the concern who re ! tired recently has been ail ing for months w c thorne states condition is serious montgomery ward head and founder of the firm bearing his name one of the largest mail order houses in the world and the man who for years bore the title of watchdog of he lake front is near death at his home in highland park as the result of an accident william c thorne vice pres/jnt of montgomery ward & co stated early this morning that mr ward was in a very serious condition tells of bad fall i have been informed said he that mr ward had a severe fall yesterday and that his condition is regarded as i serious by his physicians mr thorne declined to discuss the accident to mr ward further it way learned however that the mil | lionaire suffered a severe fall yesterday ; he was in the bathroom at the time and is said to have been overcome by a failing spell mr ward has been ailing the past few months du.-iug the sum mer he suffered greatly from attacks of sciatic rheumatism and his general condition has be^n poor within the past few weeks he has been failing gen erally in health his friends in highland park say a shock and injury such as he sustained yesterlay may prove fatal Â« â– , a - ' '-""-' ' ' .'---'â– a corps of physicians and also mr ward's attorneys were ca'led to high laud park yesterday afternoon private detectives patrol the grounds about tke estate and will permit no strangers to enter a maid at the house refused to give any information over the phone last evening except to say that the condi tion of mr ward was serious until recent years mr ward took active part in the affairs of the concern about three years ago mr ward retired and has since lived quietly spending the greater part of his time at his high land park home formerly known as grosscup place on ravine drive condition is serious very little is known of the accident to mr ward yesterday when it hap pened the members of the firm in chi cago were notified physicians were ummoued at once but refused to tell anything of the extent of the injuries direct confirmation of the fact that mr ward is now in a serious condition however came from will am c thorne even he would make no definite state ment as to mr ward's condition or as to the accident mexican train blown up and fifty killed one american among passengers robbed by bandits laredo tex sept 22 forty fed eral soldiers and ten civilian passengers were ki'led when a train on the mexican national railway was dynamited by reb els fifty miles south of saltillo mexico according to official reports to the mex ican federal headquarters at nuevo la redo after looting the baggage coaches the passengers were robbed two dynamite mines were placed on the track and set off by electricity when the train was over them the resulting explosion wrecked the baggage express and two second-class coaches w w mervaiu of san francisco the on'y aruer can on the train escaped in jury but was robbed mackays physician and wife at outs dr joseph blake and mrs blake on verge of separation new york sept 22 a revelation to-day of differences between dr jo j seph a blake one of the foremost amer ican surgeons and his wife catharine ! i^etcham blake was followed quickly by the news that no legal action is intended ' dr blake resigned as head of the pres byterian hospital and pr ifessor of sur sery iu the college of physicians and sur geons last june he is the physician of the clarence h maekays and other society leaders george gordon battle attorney for mrs blake adm tted that the uisnnderstand ing had come to the verge of legal con test they are living apajft kiss him so girl says apprentice wife sues dr tracy loses home dentist's helpmeet avers hus band's office assistant was boss of household when that woman tried to reach me how to kiss my own husband said mrs theresa m tracy last night it was be yond endurance why she was nothing but my husband's office assistant a per son to keep his bills in order and sterilize his instruments and yet she invaded my home and ruled it mrs tracy filed suit yesterday against dr frank w tracy a dentist with of fices at 2,31 north clark street asking separate maintenance and naming icdua mcgowan his assistant as the cause of her troubles a separate suit for 30,000 damages for alienation of affections was filed against miss mcgowan the alleged love teacher mrs tracy's is a strange complaint for three years she said edna mcgowan has been dictator in my house although slje has never lived in it she came home with my husband from his office and gave me instructions on every detail of house management carried household purse it was she â– not i who carried the household purse she audited the bills she paid them she ordered the groceries and told me what to cook and when to cook it when my husband had a cold she put him to bed and fed him hot lemonade i was just the apprentice wife it seemed â€” permitted to live in the house and watch the other woman's superior methods , and i stood it i had my ch ldren two beautiful ones thank god and 1 made 1 no complaint at first humiliating as it was but then it got worse once i wanted a new bat edna mcgowan went with me to get it she censored my choice '' inquired the price and finally bought it for me â€” pay ng from the family purse i my husband's money and it was on the way home that day that she became confidential presumed to tell me what my husband liked presumed to tell me how i should make love to him how i must behave in order to rise in my husband's esteem she knew ah about it i she of course kuew all about it she thought and she bad the pationzing man ner of an alms giver when she let me â€” i so kindly you know into the secret i must kiss my husband in just such a way she confided when he left the i house in the mora ng and in just such au - j other way when he came home at night â€¢ and she seemed to share her impression : j that she was competent to teach me - ; me the wife â€” bpav to behave , . . ' was it any wonder that i eame to hate the woman : and wonder that ! â€¢ could not endure forever to live in that house she seems to hove the strangest i e inian any wonder that i â€¢ that you hear about it is sometbiug dif ferent a domestic hold she rules him with her cookery and her kitchen account books instead of the rouge pots and wine â– glai-pes that ordinary adventuresses use ajiov now i'm through mrs theresa m tracy who is sping husband alleg ing that his girl office assistant made her only an ap prentice wife .' ' barbary coast to be wiped out san francisco's notorious and storied street of sailors resorts is doomed san francisco sept 22 the bar bary coast has been officially condemned its death sentence was decreed to night unanimously the board of police commissioners voted its alio : itiou what the san francisco examiner urged should be done and what the de j cent people of san francisco fully awak ened at last to the true nature of the breeding place for crime and death tol erated so long in the heart of the city demanded through the voices of its most representative men and women was to night fulf lied , . a gathering of citizens men and wom en such as never before has been seen in the balls of justice was drawn there by interest in the vital issue of the bar bara coast short but strong resolutions were read by the clerk the four commissioners said aye and the thing was done the spot that has lent its notoriety to san francisco is doomed its years of history include innumerable stories . of shaughaing sailors of ruliug and graft it dates back to the days of placer min ing when it was the resort of sailors and the evil characters of western mining camps the text of the resolution is as fol lows resolved that after september 30 1013 no dancing shall be permitted . in any cafe restaurant or saloon where liquor is sold within the district bounded on the north and east by the bay on the south by clay street and on the west by stockton street further resolved that no woman pa trons or woman employes shall be per mitted in any saloon in the said dis trict further resolved that no license shall hereafter be renewed on pacific street between kearney ami sansome streets excepting for a straight saloon aviator breaks record â– carries seven passengers for 17 min utes and 35 seconds special cable to the examiner london sept 22 louis noel broke a world's aviat on record for endurance at heudou to-day when he carried seven passengers in a flight which lasted sÂ«v . enteen minutes ami thirty-five seconds Â» i gov sulzer loses plea to end trial as illegal sy james j montague board in private session upsets governor's counsel's argu ment that impeachment was made in an unlawful manner oniy one member an independ ent democrat from buffalo casts ballot in favor of clem ency for new york executive progress of sulzer application to set aside impeach ment by the assembly in special session as i legal was rejected with only on-i dissenting vote argument in favor of the appli cation was made by louis marshall on behalf of sulzer the legality cf the impe-:chmenr was defended by alton b parker and edgar truman brackett announcement was made that j charles f murphy leader of tam many hall wa -. ready to take the witness stand to deny su zer's charge that he had instig.-.ted the impeachment to-day the sulzer attorneys wilt attack the legality of the impeach ment artic es especially those j charging offerses committed prior j to the beginning of the governor's j term of office albany k y sept 22.-by the over whelming vote of 51 to 1 the high eo'urt of impeachment to-tiny decided that tins assembly had a right under the law to impeach wil'iam sulzer of h'gh crimes and misdemeanors and that the trial must therefore proceed this means that sulzer must go to trial on evidence the third line of defense based on the contention that articles oil impeachment are inadequate will not save him from trial even if success ful the vote taken after a brief execnt've session of the court was a staggering blow to the sulzer defense and sent the governor's lawyers scurrying to the books to prepare for to-morrow's attack on the indictment and to make ready the last fight on the facts which is uow in evitable a conference of all the counsel was held at the executive session till ate to-night to arrange for to-morrow'u battle father of employe faithful .. st'-lzer's solitary supporter in the conrt after five hours of argumtnt had thrown up his second line of technical breast works was senator wende of buffalo whose son according to evidence taken by the frawley committee served many weeks on one of ulzer's pay rolls at & sa ary of 50 a week the vote came i.fter louis marshall had concluded a two days argument for sulzer anu alton b parser and edward t brackett had consumed three hours between them in support of the legality of the impeachment as heretofore the great weight of the opinion of presiding justice cullea had a profound effect on the court thla opinion was given when the judge's namo was reached in the roll in its alphabetic order he had previously given sotao indication of his opinion in questions to mr marshall before an executive ses sion was moved he offered to decide the question under the power conferred on him by the rules takes full responsibility the presiding member of the court " he said does not feel inclined to use the power granted under the rules to decide in the first instance though he has no hesitation in saying his opinion if the members want it as he has no wish to evide any responsibility justice collin on assurance from the | presiding judge that the court night be cleared moved that this be done and subsequent proceedings were in executtto sssiou here is in substance the opinion - by justice colin when as the tenth of those responding he made tin ! unanimous vote of the court a certi i vol no to the motion the th pro ceedings against gnizer bo dlsml . and 1 might as well rake this opportunity of expressing the reason fo - my vote it is urged by counsel for the manaier of the impeachment that the assembly has the right to vote at any time and present particulars of itnpcsiel that doctrine i dissent in to it is true that it is the asset n\f that has the right given it by the cot g ttbtlon to impeach bat the assembly 1 1 continued on 2d page 7th column ' Chicago and vicinity â€” in gj j itum j creasing cloudiness tuesday with f df *Â£Â£__Â¥ ; xt / f jj probably rain by night rising ter i *^ â– â– | perature ; l__^l range of temperatures yesterday *â– Â«Â»' highest 49 c3c lo.vest 38 jd c average 43.5 Â« Â° ; u ' i i examiner leads in circulation the daily and sunday examiner m august sold more papers m the city of Chicago thar any other two morning papers ivith several thousand to spare circulation book open to the inspection of ati.v advertiser m a cozy room at % m tlie rigkt price m this is the kind of room you are anxious to get ijv whether you have come to Chicago to attend w school or take a position there are hundreds and it even thousands of comfortable cozy rooms to rent * in Chicago at rates that you can afford you will find many of these desirable rooms advertised in the want ad columns of the examiner to-day and every day here is the place to look for the best rooms at the most reasonable rentals those who have vacant rooms to rent can rent jj them quick by advertising them in the want ad fftfa columns of the examiner this is the best way jmm i the sure way to get tenants for vacant rooms f[jjjjfl|jh â– all you have to do is to phone main 5,u00 jj do so at once and rent that vacant room wjj

Chicago examiner vol xl no 236 a m tuesday Chicago september 23 1913 tuesday reentered in u s patent office price one cent ss^tt packers are given shock by warning of pasior two hundred delegates at feast hear the rev r a white de clare that suppression of in dividualism is a misfortune chicagoans assail government for too strict inspection and urge subsidy to the farmers to increase their production two hundred delegates to the packers â€¢ onvention dimng last night at the con gress hotel received a rude shock when the rev dr rufus a white pastor of the people's liberal church thrust upon them this question what is going to happen to this coun try through the suppression of individ ualism which is apparently a necessary result of the development of big busi ness such eminent packers as a watson armour arthur meeker edward f swift lawrence h armour charles h swift nelson morris harold h swift kdward morris jr and thomas e wil son stared in amazement as the reverend after-dinner speaker dropping his vein of airy persiflage delivered this thrust while answering to the toast of the social side of business ambitious worker lost in the rush of big business said the hev dr white individualism is sub merged the ambitious worker is lost n the great rases c 2 employes there jay be a dozen men trained expe rienced capable each of them fitted to j)e the head of a business but in tlia vorlrugs of-^pur great machine-like cora jiwimfrjthere rsqjoom at the top for only sne man among wtose twelve ambitious experienced men and the other j leven must remain mere elxrka or aub erdinates individualism is being lost sight of it is a great misfortune that that is so or individualism is what has builded up ihls great country it will be a sad day for the nation if through the workings of your great com i:iatio:i and of other industrial aggrega tions you succeed in submerging the in dividual and crush out individual initia tive and individual effort in just the degree that you create a dominant and exclusive class of captains t industry each having despotic rule over thousands of routine subordinates rom whom all aspiration and ambition has been crushed out by the hopelessness if advancement in just that degree you lave weakened the citizenship of amer ica menace to citizenship if you reduce men to the level of mere mployes without hope of promotion or success in life you have killed the hope of citizenship in these men you have killed their initiative and their chance of advancement by perseverance industry and effort since the world began two forces have struggled for dominance in the af fairs of men individualism and collectiv ism individualism has accomplished some o the greatest tnings in the world but combination has now obtained the | mastery and the struggle reaches into all departments of business life this tendency to collectivism may be dunne sends troops to end mine slayings . i soldiers go to franklin county to prevent riots springfield 111 sept 22 acting upon the request of sheriff vaughn of i franklin county governor dunne to night directed adjutant general dickson to send state troods to benton franklin county where serious trouble is feared following the killing of two men coal miners are alleged to have killed the men and rumors became current to i night that an element in the town was preparing to retaliate general dickson jrdered company f benton fourth regiment on duty un 1 der command of captain o c smith duty keeps clark from chautauqua i speaker of house says he too had chance to lecture washington sept 22.-here is j speaker clark's statement as to why he declintd chautauqua engagements he ! does not want to be placed in position i of criticising bryan in fact he thinks | bryan made his real mistake by not quitting when criticised he says bryan's time was such that he could make lectures while he clark couldn't i could not accept engagements for the chautauqua lecture this summer be cause the house was in session said speaker clark it was my duty to stay here as speaker of the house of repre sentatives i felt it necessary to be pres ent to preside over the house i had been elected by the democrauu members to this office its duties have kept me busy that is the reason why j i did not go on the chautauqua plat j form this summer we are here still to ask law to keep bryan off platform britten says resolution will be introduced next season washington sept 22 if secretary of state bryan goes back to the lecture platform on the chautauqua circuit rep resentative britten of Chicago will intro duce a resolution forbidding a member of the cabinet to lecture for pay he annouced this to-day when he failed to introduce the resolution at this time it is toe late for f'nis season ":.' - secretary bryan has announced that his lecture at warrenton was the last one this year although the resolution is pri marily directed at cabinet officers it will include members of congress also i think they should be forb:dden to lecture for pay while congress is in session morgan abroad , is mum on u.s affairs financier going to london and continent for vacation plymouth eng sept 22 among the passengers arriving to-day on the liner kaiser wilhelm were j p morgan and his sister mrs w p hamilton mr morgan is going to london and the conti nent for a vacation he refused to dis cuss american business or political af fairs after two more trips the kaiser wilhelm will be withdrawn from commis s on and be altered so she can carry only first and third class passengers to the exclusion of second class gas heater kills sleeper john burke 4405 west harrison street secretary of the Chicago fire appliance company 40 north dearborn street was found dead in bed yesterday at his home by mrs helen rockerfeller 4353 west harrison street a friend of the family when she entered the nouse to cook sup per for him a gas heater was burning and the police believe that this used up the oxygen in the room and burke was suffocated save 5 lost 36 hours on boat in lake storm lifesavers rescue men for whom bride and sweetheart watch till exhausted waited for two sons father of youths who built boat encourages women de spite own fears louis ropke now sixty-eight years old bu it a boat about seven years ago the strongest kind of a boat he knew how the gasoline launch comet he saw his two sons and three other fishermen go aboard her sunday morning saw them motor out into lake michigan until they were gone from sight saw a terrific gale arise over the lake and waited sleep less thirty-six hours for his boys who should have returned in five life sav ers picked up the crew last night at michigan city half dead they had passed through one of the most terrible experiences ever survived on the lakes and so had the old man and the women who watched from louis ropke's fisher man's shanty at the foot of fifty-first street frank ropke as captain and thomas his brother with thomas wainwright charles kimball and l j reger made up the party they were lost in the lake from 10 o'clock sunday morning until nearly dark yesterday without blankets without warm clothing without food â€” ex cepting raw fish with numbed fingers they were compelled to cling to the boat which the lake seemed striving to snatch away from them two women watch meanwhile louis ropke was trying to comfort two vxomen and himself in the fisher shanty one of the women was grace quiinby a girl of nineteen years who is to marry frank ropke the other woman was the wife of thomas wainwright these women knew that the o'd man beside them was the builder of the boat and over and over again they begged mtn v v-wbtjtn'otv tr ftr-r 8 he give ast,ui-.ui,_e3 â€” but when the strain was all over be confessed that he had been tryiug harder to assure himself than them i was wondering about her fastenings and her stem post and her ribs ail the time he said i knew i had built her strong but it was so long ago i could just see every piece of timber in her makeup every seam of her and i knew what she was up against an ordinary boat v.ould have been pounded to spli.t ter lie lake just takes hold of a launch you uw and sort of grips it with one band while she smashes it with the other anyway it seems like that like the face of a prize fighter being pummeled in a clinch 1 knew the comet could stand a ot oi punishment but how much first sunday passed jen all sunday night then all jouday and grace here who's to be my daughter-in-law trying all the while to keep her nerves in band and her eyes dry and a little iaith in her heart but i'm g.ad i built that boat batteries of boat die it was a strange story that frank ropke skipper of the comet toid after the life savers at michigan city had re stored him and his companions to some think like life we had trouble from the start he said we went out just to aftend a net about fifteen miles out in the lake we expected to be back early in the after noon and so didn't take a bite of pro visions and we bad been so anxious to get an early start that we had every one of us gone out without breakfast we were just about fourteen miles out when our batteries died on us that was at 10 o'clock sunday morning we tried the emergency batteries but they were out of commission too there wasn't anything to do but keep a sharp lookout and wait at first we decided to stay at anchor in the hope of being picked up but the storm kept rising until nobody would ex pect to see any kind of boat coming from shore nobody would have been fool ish enough to leave then we decided to cut loose and drift with the wind eat fish flaw the storm sent waves over us uine and again and it seemed as if the gaie and the high sea together would pick up out little boat give it a toss and turn it upside down then the real suffering started my brother tom had cramps in his stomach and all of us were limp as wet handker chiefs from exposure and hard work and no food we had some fish but we had 10 eat them raw and they were not so bad at that we were going to draw straws to de cide which of us should jump into the lake and take chances on gett ng ashore alive to send rescuers when we saw the life savers coming richard schlmluski a city west fisher i man was the one who sent the rescuers he saw the distressed launch and ran five miles to g^ve the alarm fire at studebaker audience keeps cool first showing of the winning of barbara worth is interrupted at the beginning of the second act at the first performance of the winning of barbara worth at the studebaker theater last n'ght bunting decorating the scenery caught fire the flames were extinguished by john o'malley a prop erty man whose hand was burned se verely when he carried a portion of blaz ing bunting off the stage the audience of 1,000 persons evinced curiosity rather than fear and remained seated several of those occupying the front rows called to frazier coulter and james c edwards who occupied the stage at the time put it out put it out they said in accordance with the requirements of the city fire ordinance the steel curtain was lowered and after an interruption of less than five minutes the performance continued no one left the theater diaz expected to withdraw candidacy mexico politicans say huerta wi'l run and be elected special cable ts the examiner mexico city sept 22 a late edi tion of el notlciozo announces that felix diaz will withdraw his candidacy for the presidency the catholic party convention which met again to-day in secret session has not yet agreed upon a candidate it has been reported that general mas a nephew of huerta may get the nomina tion and also that frederico gamboa has strong backing but it is not believed that either will accept it is hinted that the nomination may go to huerta himself he has been in high favor with members of the catholic party since his appointment of eduardo tamariz leader of the party as minister of public instruction â€¢ the belief among politicians and the public generally is that huerta will run i and be elected kaiser's chum asks loan of 5,500,000 emperor's favorite brewery is in eluded in mortgage special cable ta the examiner berlin sef 22 prince max egon zu furstemberg the kaiser's most inti ' mate friend being in straits is floating a loan of 5,500,000 with most of his baden estates as security the property includes donauesthingen where the kai ser is an annual guest and the brewery which supplies the kaiser with his beer and ale the prince's embarrassment is a sequel to the prince's trust cons.st ing of furstenberg and prince christian zu nothenlobe a kinsman of the kaiser of late the trust has been short of 1 money judge speer 111 with worry over charges impeachment matter to come up soon in congress rome ga sept 22 a report from highlands n c to-day said that judge emory speer of the southern district of georgia is critically ill as a result of worry over the threatened impeachment proceedings judge speer went to highlands two weeks ago for a rest the judiciary committee of the house of representatives will take up the charges in the near future woman walking in sleep falls 2 floors son finds her dying on ground with leg broken mrs ida thompson 2720 castello ave nue was severely injured last night when she walked out of a window on the sec ond floor of her home while asleep she fell into a conrtway the crash of glass was heard by her sbn charles thompson who called some neighbors she was carried into her home and a physician was called she was later taken to the norwegian j i deaconess hospital where it was found | that her r gift leg was broken and her j spine injured composer puccini is rescued from wreck 1 comes near drowning as craft ! sinks after co lision in italy special caale to tils esjuaiaar i 1 omk sept 22 while beating to-day on lake massticiuccoii near pisa giaco ' mo puccini the composer narrowly es ' eapeu drowning a boat wh ch he was < steering collided bow-on with another in : ! which were the members of his family , botb boats were sinking when rescuers j arrived i montgomery ward of mail order firm is near death j watch dog of lake front falls in his bathroom and is seri ously injured and it is feared that he will not recover head of the concern who re ! tired recently has been ail ing for months w c thorne states condition is serious montgomery ward head and founder of the firm bearing his name one of the largest mail order houses in the world and the man who for years bore the title of watchdog of he lake front is near death at his home in highland park as the result of an accident william c thorne vice pres/jnt of montgomery ward & co stated early this morning that mr ward was in a very serious condition tells of bad fall i have been informed said he that mr ward had a severe fall yesterday and that his condition is regarded as i serious by his physicians mr thorne declined to discuss the accident to mr ward further it way learned however that the mil | lionaire suffered a severe fall yesterday ; he was in the bathroom at the time and is said to have been overcome by a failing spell mr ward has been ailing the past few months du.-iug the sum mer he suffered greatly from attacks of sciatic rheumatism and his general condition has be^n poor within the past few weeks he has been failing gen erally in health his friends in highland park say a shock and injury such as he sustained yesterlay may prove fatal Â« â– , a - ' '-""-' ' ' .'---'â– a corps of physicians and also mr ward's attorneys were ca'led to high laud park yesterday afternoon private detectives patrol the grounds about tke estate and will permit no strangers to enter a maid at the house refused to give any information over the phone last evening except to say that the condi tion of mr ward was serious until recent years mr ward took active part in the affairs of the concern about three years ago mr ward retired and has since lived quietly spending the greater part of his time at his high land park home formerly known as grosscup place on ravine drive condition is serious very little is known of the accident to mr ward yesterday when it hap pened the members of the firm in chi cago were notified physicians were ummoued at once but refused to tell anything of the extent of the injuries direct confirmation of the fact that mr ward is now in a serious condition however came from will am c thorne even he would make no definite state ment as to mr ward's condition or as to the accident mexican train blown up and fifty killed one american among passengers robbed by bandits laredo tex sept 22 forty fed eral soldiers and ten civilian passengers were ki'led when a train on the mexican national railway was dynamited by reb els fifty miles south of saltillo mexico according to official reports to the mex ican federal headquarters at nuevo la redo after looting the baggage coaches the passengers were robbed two dynamite mines were placed on the track and set off by electricity when the train was over them the resulting explosion wrecked the baggage express and two second-class coaches w w mervaiu of san francisco the on'y aruer can on the train escaped in jury but was robbed mackays physician and wife at outs dr joseph blake and mrs blake on verge of separation new york sept 22 a revelation to-day of differences between dr jo j seph a blake one of the foremost amer ican surgeons and his wife catharine ! i^etcham blake was followed quickly by the news that no legal action is intended ' dr blake resigned as head of the pres byterian hospital and pr ifessor of sur sery iu the college of physicians and sur geons last june he is the physician of the clarence h maekays and other society leaders george gordon battle attorney for mrs blake adm tted that the uisnnderstand ing had come to the verge of legal con test they are living apajft kiss him so girl says apprentice wife sues dr tracy loses home dentist's helpmeet avers hus band's office assistant was boss of household when that woman tried to reach me how to kiss my own husband said mrs theresa m tracy last night it was be yond endurance why she was nothing but my husband's office assistant a per son to keep his bills in order and sterilize his instruments and yet she invaded my home and ruled it mrs tracy filed suit yesterday against dr frank w tracy a dentist with of fices at 2,31 north clark street asking separate maintenance and naming icdua mcgowan his assistant as the cause of her troubles a separate suit for 30,000 damages for alienation of affections was filed against miss mcgowan the alleged love teacher mrs tracy's is a strange complaint for three years she said edna mcgowan has been dictator in my house although slje has never lived in it she came home with my husband from his office and gave me instructions on every detail of house management carried household purse it was she â– not i who carried the household purse she audited the bills she paid them she ordered the groceries and told me what to cook and when to cook it when my husband had a cold she put him to bed and fed him hot lemonade i was just the apprentice wife it seemed â€” permitted to live in the house and watch the other woman's superior methods , and i stood it i had my ch ldren two beautiful ones thank god and 1 made 1 no complaint at first humiliating as it was but then it got worse once i wanted a new bat edna mcgowan went with me to get it she censored my choice '' inquired the price and finally bought it for me â€” pay ng from the family purse i my husband's money and it was on the way home that day that she became confidential presumed to tell me what my husband liked presumed to tell me how i should make love to him how i must behave in order to rise in my husband's esteem she knew ah about it i she of course kuew all about it she thought and she bad the pationzing man ner of an alms giver when she let me â€” i so kindly you know into the secret i must kiss my husband in just such a way she confided when he left the i house in the mora ng and in just such au - j other way when he came home at night â€¢ and she seemed to share her impression : j that she was competent to teach me - ; me the wife â€” bpav to behave , . . ' was it any wonder that i eame to hate the woman : and wonder that ! â€¢ could not endure forever to live in that house she seems to hove the strangest i e inian any wonder that i â€¢ that you hear about it is sometbiug dif ferent a domestic hold she rules him with her cookery and her kitchen account books instead of the rouge pots and wine â– glai-pes that ordinary adventuresses use ajiov now i'm through mrs theresa m tracy who is sping husband alleg ing that his girl office assistant made her only an ap prentice wife .' ' barbary coast to be wiped out san francisco's notorious and storied street of sailors resorts is doomed san francisco sept 22 the bar bary coast has been officially condemned its death sentence was decreed to night unanimously the board of police commissioners voted its alio : itiou what the san francisco examiner urged should be done and what the de j cent people of san francisco fully awak ened at last to the true nature of the breeding place for crime and death tol erated so long in the heart of the city demanded through the voices of its most representative men and women was to night fulf lied , . a gathering of citizens men and wom en such as never before has been seen in the balls of justice was drawn there by interest in the vital issue of the bar bara coast short but strong resolutions were read by the clerk the four commissioners said aye and the thing was done the spot that has lent its notoriety to san francisco is doomed its years of history include innumerable stories . of shaughaing sailors of ruliug and graft it dates back to the days of placer min ing when it was the resort of sailors and the evil characters of western mining camps the text of the resolution is as fol lows resolved that after september 30 1013 no dancing shall be permitted . in any cafe restaurant or saloon where liquor is sold within the district bounded on the north and east by the bay on the south by clay street and on the west by stockton street further resolved that no woman pa trons or woman employes shall be per mitted in any saloon in the said dis trict further resolved that no license shall hereafter be renewed on pacific street between kearney ami sansome streets excepting for a straight saloon aviator breaks record â– carries seven passengers for 17 min utes and 35 seconds special cable to the examiner london sept 22 louis noel broke a world's aviat on record for endurance at heudou to-day when he carried seven passengers in a flight which lasted sÂ«v . enteen minutes ami thirty-five seconds Â» i gov sulzer loses plea to end trial as illegal sy james j montague board in private session upsets governor's counsel's argu ment that impeachment was made in an unlawful manner oniy one member an independ ent democrat from buffalo casts ballot in favor of clem ency for new york executive progress of sulzer application to set aside impeach ment by the assembly in special session as i legal was rejected with only on-i dissenting vote argument in favor of the appli cation was made by louis marshall on behalf of sulzer the legality cf the impe-:chmenr was defended by alton b parker and edgar truman brackett announcement was made that j charles f murphy leader of tam many hall wa -. ready to take the witness stand to deny su zer's charge that he had instig.-.ted the impeachment to-day the sulzer attorneys wilt attack the legality of the impeach ment artic es especially those j charging offerses committed prior j to the beginning of the governor's j term of office albany k y sept 22.-by the over whelming vote of 51 to 1 the high eo'urt of impeachment to-tiny decided that tins assembly had a right under the law to impeach wil'iam sulzer of h'gh crimes and misdemeanors and that the trial must therefore proceed this means that sulzer must go to trial on evidence the third line of defense based on the contention that articles oil impeachment are inadequate will not save him from trial even if success ful the vote taken after a brief execnt've session of the court was a staggering blow to the sulzer defense and sent the governor's lawyers scurrying to the books to prepare for to-morrow's attack on the indictment and to make ready the last fight on the facts which is uow in evitable a conference of all the counsel was held at the executive session till ate to-night to arrange for to-morrow'u battle father of employe faithful .. st'-lzer's solitary supporter in the conrt after five hours of argumtnt had thrown up his second line of technical breast works was senator wende of buffalo whose son according to evidence taken by the frawley committee served many weeks on one of ulzer's pay rolls at & sa ary of 50 a week the vote came i.fter louis marshall had concluded a two days argument for sulzer anu alton b parser and edward t brackett had consumed three hours between them in support of the legality of the impeachment as heretofore the great weight of the opinion of presiding justice cullea had a profound effect on the court thla opinion was given when the judge's namo was reached in the roll in its alphabetic order he had previously given sotao indication of his opinion in questions to mr marshall before an executive ses sion was moved he offered to decide the question under the power conferred on him by the rules takes full responsibility the presiding member of the court " he said does not feel inclined to use the power granted under the rules to decide in the first instance though he has no hesitation in saying his opinion if the members want it as he has no wish to evide any responsibility justice collin on assurance from the | presiding judge that the court night be cleared moved that this be done and subsequent proceedings were in executtto sssiou here is in substance the opinion - by justice colin when as the tenth of those responding he made tin ! unanimous vote of the court a certi i vol no to the motion the th pro ceedings against gnizer bo dlsml . and 1 might as well rake this opportunity of expressing the reason fo - my vote it is urged by counsel for the manaier of the impeachment that the assembly has the right to vote at any time and present particulars of itnpcsiel that doctrine i dissent in to it is true that it is the asset n\f that has the right given it by the cot g ttbtlon to impeach bat the assembly 1 1 continued on 2d page 7th column ' Chicago and vicinity â€” in gj j itum j creasing cloudiness tuesday with f df *Â£Â£__Â¥ ; xt / f jj probably rain by night rising ter i *^ â– â– | perature ; l__^l range of temperatures yesterday *â– Â«Â»' highest 49 c3c lo.vest 38 jd c average 43.5 Â« Â° ; u ' i i examiner leads in circulation the daily and sunday examiner m august sold more papers m the city of Chicago thar any other two morning papers ivith several thousand to spare circulation book open to the inspection of ati.v advertiser m a cozy room at % m tlie rigkt price m this is the kind of room you are anxious to get ijv whether you have come to Chicago to attend w school or take a position there are hundreds and it even thousands of comfortable cozy rooms to rent * in Chicago at rates that you can afford you will find many of these desirable rooms advertised in the want ad columns of the examiner to-day and every day here is the place to look for the best rooms at the most reasonable rentals those who have vacant rooms to rent can rent jj them quick by advertising them in the want ad fftfa columns of the examiner this is the best way jmm i the sure way to get tenants for vacant rooms f[jjjjfl|jh â– all you have to do is to phone main 5,u00 jj do so at once and rent that vacant room wjj